greg louganis, it's really good to see you again. >> it's great to see you. >> welcome back.ed. did you think that it was a death sentence for yourself? >> well, yeah, when i was first tested, it was six months prior to the olympic games in seoul in 1988. my thought was if i was hiv positive, then i was going to be the honorable thing and go -- i was training in florida. so i was going to go back to my home in california and lock myself in my house and wait to die, because that's what we thought of hiv. it was a death sentence. you know, doctors were saying get your affairs in order and all that. but the doctor that i was seeing in florida, my cousin, he said that the healthiest thing for you is to continue training. and so then i focused all that energy into my training and preparing for the olympics. and so that was a much more positive focus. >> yeah. >> so i think it ultimately saved my life. >> and luckily the perceptions have changed. >> yeah, but i think, greg, there's still a lot of misunderstanding about this virus. what's your feeling about that? >> there is. i mean